After enjoying some success as a writer, Ruark decided it was time to fulfill a lifelong dream of going on a
safari in Africa, fueled by his doctor's advice to take a year's rest. Legendary
Ker and
Downey Safaris booked him with
Harry Selby. Ruark began a love affair with Africa. Ruark was booked with Selby because of a desire to use a tracker named Kidogo, who had once hunted with Ruark's friend, Russell B. Aitken, when white hunter Frank Bowman guided him. Ruark's pairing with Selby, though fortuitous, was pure chance. At the time of Ruark's safari booking, Kidogo had left Bowman and joined Selby's crew. Ruark requested to hunt with whichever white hunter Kidogo was working for. As a result of this first safari, Ruark wrote a book called
Horn of the Hunter, in which he detailed his hunt. Selby became an overnight legend and was subsequently booked by Americans for up to five years in advance to duplicate Ruark's adventures. After the first safari, Selby and Ruark went hunting again, and this time they took cameras along. The result was a one-hour documentary titled
Africa Adventure, released by
RKO Pictures. Though extremely difficult to find, a 16mm print of this movie was discovered in 2002, and a DVD copy was created and donated to the Robert Ruark Foundation in
Southport, North Carolina. An online version was subsequently posted on a popular consumer streaming site. In 1953, Ruark began writing a series for
Field & Stream magazine entitled
The Old Man and the Boy. Considered largely autobiographical (although technically fiction), this heartwarming series ran until late 1961. The stories were characterized by the philosophical musings of the
Old Man, who was modeled after both of Ruark's grandfathers, but mostly on Captain Edward "Ned" Hall Adkins, Ruark's maternal grandfather. In the stories, young Bob Ruark grows up hunting and fishing in coastal North Carolina, always guided by the Old Man. However, the pain of his parents' difficult domestic life and his relatively few childhood friends (Ruark, something of a child prodigy in school, was a loner) are tellingly absent from the narratives. Many of the stories were collected into a book of the same name, followed shortly thereafter by a companion book entitled ''The Old Man's Boy Grows Older
. Today, these two books are probably his best remembered works. Twenty stories were also published in the book Robert Ruark's Africa''. Ruark's first bestselling novel was published in 1955. Entitled
Something of Value, it describes the
Mau Mau Uprising by
Kenyan rebels against British rule. The novel drew from the author's personal knowledge and experiences on safari in
Africa, and was adapted into a 1957 film,
Something of Value.
Uhuru, a novel with a similar theme but not intended as a sequel, was published in 1962. "Uhuru" is the Swahili word for
freedom. The book apparently libeled a particular politician in Kenya. While Ruark was in Nairobi after its publication, staying at the New Stanley Hotel, he learned that this politician had filed a lawsuit against him. Before he could be served with papers, however, he was tipped off and fled overnight to South Africa by air. He had intended to write a final book in the series with the working title of "A Long View From a Tall Hill," but this never materialized. ==Last years==